An insanely, egocentric ventriloquist, even though he is possessed by his wooden dummy, is in love with a dancer who is in love with another. The dummy gives advice to the ventriloquist.An insanely, egocentric ventriloquist, even though he is possessed by his wooden dummy, is in love with a dancer who is in love with another. The dummy gives advice to the ventriloquist.An insanely, egocentric ventriloquist, even though he is possessed by his wooden dummy, is in love with a dancer who is in love with another. The dummy gives advice to the ventriloquist.
Erich von Stroheim
- The Great Gabbo
- (as Eric Von Stroheim)
Marjorie Kane
- Babe
- (as Margie 'Babe' Kane)
George Grandee
- Otto
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Bo Peep Karlin
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
Rosina Lawrence
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
Harry Ross
- Performer
- (uncredited)
Eddy Waller
- Vaudevillian
- (uncredited)
Marbeth Wright
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe dummy Otto was a hand carved basswood Frank Marshall figure. The same man who designed Edgar Bergen's famous characters Charlie McCarthy and Mortimer Snerd.
- GoofsThe dancers doubling for Betty Compson and Donald Douglas during the acrobatic sequences of "Web of Love" don't match up with them physically. Compson's double is younger and slimmer, while Douglas's double is beefier, especially in the legs.
- Alternate versionsThe Great Gabbo (1929) was originally released by Sono Art-World Wide Pictures, with certain sequences were presented in Multicolor. However, current prints, restored by the Library of Congress and released by Kino International on DVD, exist only in black-and-white. Most, perhaps all, VHS and DVD releases of the film have the color sequences in black and white.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Girl from Calgary (1932)
- SoundtracksEvery Now and Then
(uncredited)
Written by King Zany and Donald McNamee
Performed by Marjorie Kane and Donald Douglas
Featured review
This film about a ventriloquist who lives a self-imposed life of lonliness because of his personality is absorbing, different, and dated. Shortly produced after The Jazz Singer(1927), the film is an early talkie with all the characteristics of an early talkie. It has somewhat stilted stages, little camera movement, and most annoying, a bunch of Busby Berkley type musical numbers that have little to do with the plot. All that notwithstanding, the lead role of Gabbo, a man who lives to be successful no matter what it takes, who is willing to forsake personal happiness to achieve, who runs the scope of emotions in minutes, is played with gusto by that wonderful actor(and even greater director) Erich Von Stroheim. Von Stroheim uses all his European charm(and decadence) as the man who shares life and lives with and through his dummy Otto. There are no supernatural aspects about the relationship with Gabbo and Otto. The movie is in no way a horror picture(although very often advertised as such). It really is a story of the problems a man has exhibiting his emotions, living with others, and living with himself. Some of the scenes are very well-done, including the last shot as we see Gabbo avoid a ladder. The rest of the cast is effective with Betty Compson as a love interest doing a fine job, and Donald Douglas as a lead singer/romantic figure being absolutely absurd. If for no other reason, see the film to see Von Stroheim in action. There was no one like him.
- BaronBl00d
- Mar 19, 2001
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
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